“…Ground‐based gravimetry can determine the change of gravity related to Earth rotation fluctuations, to celestial body and Earth attractions, to the mass variations in the direct vicinity of the instruments, and also to distant sources, and to displacement of the instrument itself due to ground deformation. Gravity measurements contribute to risk assessment and mitigation, by improving our understanding of past and present ice mass changes (Kazama et al, ; Lambert et al, ; Larson & van Dam, ; Mazzotti et al, ; Mémin et al, ; Omang & Kierulf, ; Ophaug et al, ; van Dam et al, ), subsidence of low‐lying areas (Van Camp et al, ; Zerbini et al, ), ground water resources (Creutzfeldt et al, ; Fores et al, ; Hector et al, ; Imanishi et al, ; Jacob et al, ; Kennedy et al, ; Lampitelli & Francis, ; Van Camp, de Viron, Pajot‐Métivier, et al, ; Van Camp et al, ), and earthquakes (Imanishi, ; Montagner et al, ; Van Camp et al, ). Concurrently, terrestrial gravity measurements play a key role in the new definition of the kilogram (Stock, ), and our understanding of environmental effects affecting the gravity measurements will be useful to assess the Newtonian noise affecting gravitational wave detectors (Coughlin et al, ; Harms & Venkateswara, ).…”